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Despite the benefits of the connected car, the issue of privacy is a concern

One dilemma is whether drivers should be punished for speeding, when speed information can be transmitted

Driverless cars will make is possible to text while driving, but texting habits will likely not remain private either

Most of the conversation at FutureCast focused upon the benefits of the connected car. But for all the unquestionable upsides of networked transportation, there was one issue that darkened the horizon for some of the event's participants. That issue was privacy.

"I'm not sure I'm going to get inside one of those things," I myself remarked at FutureCast about driverless cars, "because -- just like Google Glass -- they are going to know where I am all of the time."

I certainly wasn't alone in my concern about the fate of personal data in the age of the intelligent car.

"As for privacy, I do care about privacy," said Michael Fertik, the co-founder and CEO of Reputation.com. "I'm always nervous when data are collected without our real actual knowledge and sold and shared with people who we can't identify for purposes we will never know."

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Geoff Hollingworth, Head of Business Innovation at Ericsson, was more specific in his concern. "So all these cars are connected. They all know how fast they are going. They all know the speed zones they are running in," he said. "Should the car issue a ticket? Should it tell the police to issue a ticket if you are breaking the speed limit?"

In this brave new world of transparent data, the dilemma about where to draw the line between respecting the privacy of individual drivers and punishing law breakers is complex. Hollingworth described this world as a "strange place" because we've never before "had the ability to actually validate the people who are always obeying or breaking the law."

"Hands up here, who texts when they drive?" Hollingworth playfully asked the FutureCast audience.

That kind of question may be redundant when we all drive connected cars. This intelligent automobile will, of course, be able to record exactly how fast we are driving and where are going. And it will also know the frequency of our texts, who we text and who texts us.

Hollingworth's "strange place" is, I fear, a scary place. The car, once that secluded place which guaranteed our privacy, is in danger of becoming a transparent hub of what some people are calling the "Internet of Things."

The dark side of the connected car is its transparency. Do we, I wonder, really want to drive these all-seeing things?